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ROME: As Italy's coalition government reaches breaking point with the proposed resignation of its premier Giuseppe Conte on Tuesday, here is a recap of more than a year of drama in Italian politics:

 

- Inconclusive election -

=========================

 

Italians vote on March 4, 2018, in an uncertain election marked by a far-right and populist surge and a campaign dominated by anger against immigration.

The outcome shakes the order of Italian politics that has been in place for half a century.

The anti-immigrant League party, led by Matteo Salvini, heads a right-wing coalition, which includes former prime minister Silvio Berlusconi's Forza Italia. The coalition overall takes 37 percent of the vote, with the League alone on 17 percent.

Meanwhile the anti-establishment Five Star Movement (M5S), led by  Luigi Di Maio, becomes the leading single party with nearly 33 percent.

Both the League and M5S claim they have won the mandate to govern.

 

- Talks for a coalition -

=========================

 

Forming a coalition government proves complicated and all early attempts come to nothing.

In a major step forward the two parties publish on May 18 a joint policy programme for their would-be populist coalition -- anti-austerity, tough on immigration and security but no push to exit the euro.

On May 21 they propose a prime minister, little-known lawyer Giuseppe Conte, who gets working on drawing up a government.

Italy's President Sergio Mattarella initially hesitates over the choice but after 48 hours names him as the new Italian premier.

However, the president rejects Conte's pick of staunch eurosceptic Paolo Savona as economy minister and Conte quits on May 27.

On May 28 Mattarella appoints pro-austerity economist Carlo Cottarelli as prime minister, giving him the mandate to form a potential technocrat government and sparking fury from the League and M5S.

The parties launch a last-ditch bid to revive their coalition on May 31, offering a compromise candidate in place of Savona, who is proposed as European Affairs minister.

 

- Multiple conflicts -

======================

 

The government is officially formed on June 1. Di Maio and Salvini are joint deputy prime ministers.

It is the first time a purely populist administration holds power in a founding member of the European Union.

But very quickly Salvini, who is also interior minister, raises his profile, taking up airtime, column inches and social media clicks with his anti-immigrant diatribes, stirring up insecurity and eurosceptism.

Di Maio, who is also minister of economic development, labour and social policies, tries to regain the upper hand, lashing out at the EU over migrants and threatening to cut Rome's funding for the bloc.

The clash leads to several conflicts at the heart of the coalition, raising doubts over the longevity of the populist government.

 

- European elections -

======================

 

In a historic success for the far-right, Salvini's League party wins the most votes in the May 2019 European elections in Italy with 34 percent.

On June 3 Conte says he is ready to resign unless the two parties in the coalition stop squabbling.

 

- Coalition cracks up -

=======================

 

On August 7 at a parliamentary vote, M5S votes against the financing of a multi-billion-euro high-speed train line between Lyon and Turin.

The next day Salvini steps up the pressure, pulling his support for the coalition and calling for snap elections as soon as possible.

The abandoned M5S finds an unexpected ally in the opposition Democratic Party (PD) and former centre-left premier Matteo Renzi, now PD senator.

Renzi offers the M5S support for a pragmatic coalition that would pass the parliamentary reform and next year's budget to avoid an automatic rise in value-added tax.

On August 20 Conte says he will offer his resignation to the Senate, lashing out at Salvini for pursuing his own interests by pulling the plug on the coalition.

Copyright AFP (Agence France-Press), 2019
 

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